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roy Backs Sigma Nu
.harcoal Room j ' $0\Qmn Atta(j(S
‘raws Dancers , i> • i
Benefit Dig Increase Despite Loss
I From the top of the Mark San Francisco to the star-“Charcoal room” of the
Igma I^u house will throng [embers of the Trojan stu-
Nipponese Succeed in Landing Reinforcements; Tanks Repulse All Guadalcanal Enemy Attacks
WASHINGTON, Oct. 25—(U.P.)—Japanese forces using tanks and artillery have been repulsed in four attempts to nt-bocy tonight at 8:30 as penetrate United States positions on Guadalcanal, and in the ey climax the weekend’s increasingly fierce land, sea, and air fighting U.S. forces rthern jaunt by supporting have damaged up to five more Jap warships and destroyed
21 enemy planes, the navy an-
“fire dance benefit” to aid Sigma Nus in rebuilding fir recently burned fraternity ise.
tn charge of the dance will be |nry Eschen. Sigma Nu president.
Head Yell King Russ Linder-|ith. Jl st who will furnish the Sng is not definitely decided but is probable that Trojans will get latest recordings of America's bands
[-CONDITIONED
Drat:ons for the dance will be ing to the condition of the fra-Jnity htuse which was swept by les last Monday afternoon. )ancing in the “Charcoal room,”
Ih its iew air-conditioning and natural star-studded appearance allow some 600 Trojans to taper their recent strenuous froliifc-at the Mark Hopkins and the |ace hotels in San Francisco and back to their normal work-a-lives as students.
:nty of laughs
^aturec entertainer of the “Char-roorr” will probably be popu-[ jitterbugging Lindersmith. Fresh his iriumph at the recent Ke-stadium gala event, Linder-|th car. be counted upon for the st dance steps and plenty of ?hs. Another top-ranking co-ian of the campus, Ted Olewine racquet man, may put in an ►arance.
sident Eschen said that ev-i>ne ir the university is invited urges students to attend the ce benefit. Eschen also wished thank the fraternities along the that have cooperated with Sig-Nu members by housing them wanly.
RAF Lancasters Hit Milan Plant
British Bomb War Site Fourth Time
I Arrests Jap lies in Texas
JHXNGTON, Oct. 26—(HE) — of the 52 Japanese aliens ar-l^d by the federal bureau of in-Lgaticn in Houston tonight were jbers of the “Lone Star Club” iJapnnese organization involved Ijdespread propaganda activities, raj ieamed authoritatively to-lt.
also was involved in the “us-at tempts at espionage, a hingflon official disclosed, rmbers of the club contributed py to Japan regularly, the of-revealed. but since Dec. 7, hat no way of sending it. thus anting for the large sums found lieir homes.
|st of the Japanese hoped to t» their homeland and re-Japanese and foreign secur-| in return for their contribu-
one place raided, officials 30 one-thousand dollar bonds ^e Tokyo Electric company, it id here. Another Japanese three $1000 bonds of the "King-lof Italy."
LONDON, Oct. 25—(U.E) — Heavy RAF bombers skimmed the peaks of the Alps and blasted northern Italy for the fourth time in 48 hours last night, concentrating on the industrial city of Milan, site of the huge Caproni bomt>er plant, and the Italians announced officially that “great damage” has been done and 589 persons were killed or wounded in the four raids.
It is the worst battering Italy has taken throughout the war and coincides with widespread reports of collapsing Italian morale and the launching of the allied offensive in Egypt. Axis armies in north Africa get many of their supplies from the Italian ports of Genoa and Savona, and from the industries of Turin, Milan, Monza and Novara, all of which have been hit hard in three successive night raids and one intervening attack.
VICHY ADMITS RAIL BLASTS (Vichy announced that RAF bombers atatcked south French railways at several points on their way to and from Italy Saturday afternoon. The purpose might have been to disrupt traffic on railways leading to Marseile and Nice, so the Germans could not use them for shipping supplies to Africa.)
Bomber crews attacked several other northern Italian industrial cities, including Monza and Novara last night.
RAID SMASHES GENOA
The first of the big raids Thursday night, smashed Italy's chief port of Genoa. Friday night the RAF heavily raided Genoa again and dropped tons of explosives and incendiaries on the manufacturing city of Turin and the port of Savona. almost at the exact hour that the allied army in Egypt launched its offensive.
Saturday the RAF sent an esti- j mated 50 bombers across France for the daylight raid on Milan and Saturday night a stronger force returned to smash the city again.
Bomber crews reported direct hits on important factories at Milan and important damage in other cities.
Wesley League
. . . members will have their weekly dance for both civilians and servicemen tomorrow at 7:45 p.m. at the University Methodist church, 817 West 34th street. They announced last night that more women are needed for dancing partners.
Good Chance
nounced tonight.
Despite mounting losses, however, the Japs succeeded in landing more reinforcements on the northwest end of the island today, the communique said. The strength of the new force was not known.
The land assaults were the heaviest yet described by the navy department in the current Jap drive to recapture their lost airport on Guadalcanal and marked the first time they had used tanks.
“Our army and marine corps troops and artillery batteries repulsed each attack and destroyed five enemy tanks,’’ the announcement said.
FOUR ATTACKS ON FRIDAY
Four of the ground attacks occurred Friday night and the communique said it was broken up by U.S. aircraft and artillery. One American plane was lost in the operation.
The U.S. air attacks in which the Japs ships were damaged extended from Thursday night until today.
On Thursday night U.S. long-range aircraft attacked enemy ships in the Shortland island area northwest of Guadalcanal, damaging a light cruiser with one direct and one probable torpedo hit and* a destroyer with a bomb hit. A heavy cruiser or battleship possibly was damaged by a torpedo hit. i U.S. HITS CRUISERS
On Saturday night U.S. aircraft attacked an enemy surface force of several cruisers and destroyers about 300 miles northeast of Guadalcanal. One cruiser was reported probably damaged by a torpedo.
The fifth enemy vessel, a cruiser, was damaged by bombs today when Douglas 'Dauntless' dive bombers from Guadalcanal made three attacks on an enemy force of cruisers and destroyers immediately north of Florida island. The attack forced the enemy vessels to withdraw.
The bag of 21 enemy aircraft came late Friday morning when 16 enemy bombers escorted by 20 Zero fighters attacked the American airport on Guadalcanal. Grumman Wildcat’ fighters intercepted them and shot down one of the bombers, damaged three others and destroyed the entire fighter squadron. HEAVIEST TOLL YET It was one of the heaviest tolls ever taken by the American forces in a single action in the Solomons. No mention was made of American losses, if any.
The new Jap losses brought to at least 51 the number of their ships damaged in the Solomons, in addition to 10 known to have been sunk and three probably sunk. They have lost at least 374 airplanes.
The intensified land, sea, and air action served notice that the supreme test was not far off for the army, navy, and marine forces fighting in the Solomons, as well as for their new commander, Vice Admiral William F. Halsey Jr., who yesterday was named to succeed Vice Admiral Robert L. Ghormley as chief of the Solomons campaign.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Jrojan
Vol. XXXIV
NAS—Z-42
Nieht Phone: Kl. 5471
Los Angeles, Calif., Monday, October 26, 1942
No. 27
SC CHEST CAMPAIGN TO OPEN TODAY
Allied Desert Troops tnSurpnseRa,d Crack Nazi Defenses
Allied Bombers Hit Hong Kong
TOKYO. Oct. 26 — (Japanese broadcast recorded by United Press in San Francisco) — Eight allied bombers blasted Hong Kong from a high altitude Sunday afternoon, dropping “several” incendiary bombs in the first air raid on the former British crown colony since its occupation by the Japanese, the Tokyo radio announced today.
A Japanese broadcast said Jap fighters repulsed the raiders.
“The Japanese planes immediately shot down one enemy plane,” the Tokyo radio said, “and saw another falling in a trail of black smoke.”
CAIRO, Oct. 25—(U.P.)—Allied desert troops hurled back the first enemy counter-attacks in the new battle for North Africa today and pressed on through the barbed wire and mine fields of the El Alamein line while U.S.. British, and South African planes routed the nazis from the sky and British submarines reported torpedoing 12 more ships in the Mediterranean.
Allied tanks have poured in strength through one gap in the mine fields, according to a dispatch from a United Press correspondent.
Repercussions of the battle rag- --—
Annual Campus Campaign Sets $1000 as Goal
Ing on a 40-mile stretch of desert between the Mediterranean and the
Students Probe Co-op Housing
Co-op housing plans will be oyg-inated today when two SC students, Raymond Barrio and Christine Hanks, meet with Helen H. Moreland. dean of women, and Francis M. Bacon, counselor of men.
Barrio, sophomore, was part of a successful co-op housing plan in New York City college where he enrolled before coming to SC. He is trying to get the students of SC interested in this housing.
“We cannot go ahead with any definite plans until we find that there is some interest by the student body for co-op housing” said Dean Bacon.
Several colleges in the United States have tried this plan of providing inexpensive living accomodations and found it to prove vefy successful. They eliminated a lot of extra expenses by not hiring outside help except cooks. Co-op housing w’as found to be the answer to the tire situation and to the gas rationing problem, according to supporters of the system.
If the boys continue to be drafted even the fraternities will be faced with a problem of keeping up their houses. They may have to go into co-op housing to the extent of doing most of their work and cutting down their expenses.
Dean Bacon remarked that “Any students who are interested in this plan, should come into my office and sign up.”
Two Streets Cost Nazis 9000 Men
Qattara salt bogs were rocking all of western Europe as giant RAF bombers based in Britain raced across the Alps four times in three days to blast the industries and ports of northern Italy, which supply the axis armies in Egypt. j , ,, _ , s _
I MOSCOW, Monday, Oct. 26—(U.P.)—German assault troops raf bombs France j captured two streets in the factory area of north Stalingrad
(Vichy dispatches said raf bomb- Sunday while a Russian relief army bearing down from the ers left a trail of destruction northwest swept through an inhabited locality and seized a
.U5.ou£12„s?r'!^e.1T_ stronghold where 3000 German dead were found lying in
-1 trenches and dugouts, the high
way from Vichy to the Alps Satur day afternoon on their way to and from Italy, attacking railroads in the vicinities of Vichy, Chateau-roux, Montlucon, Roanne, and Am-nency. This might mean the British were bent on preventing axis supplies reaching Africa over the south French railways to the ports
of Marseille and Nice.) i ' , .. ,
The Foundations of Western
U.S. fliers had their biggest day, ^ocmy" will be the subject of so far in Africa Saturday, bombing
Helsel Lectures at Forum Series
and shooting up axis troop camps, gun emplacements and motor caravans, and by dusk smoke rose 3000 feet in the air from blazing ammunition dumps, tanks, trucks, and oil depots. Only one enemy plane was shot down all day. Enemy anti-aircraft fire was fierce, however, and the allies lost 12 planes over the desert and Malta, where four more enemy raiders were destroyed.
the second of a series of lectures
command announced today.
Numerous assaults inside the city were beaten back, one Soviet unit withstanding five successive attacks without giving ground, but the Germans drove ahead with a new burst of fury and “at a price of heavy losses succeeded in occupying two streets of the factory settlement.” the midnight communique reported. It was the third day of a
presented by the Philosephy forum new Stalingrad offensive which cost
the Nazis 9000 men the first two
and discussed by Dr. Paul R. Helsel, associate professor of philosophy at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Bowne hall.
Dr. Helsel will contrast the temporary material things which form the basis for concepts of the totalitarian rules with the lasting, intangible qualities which axe the basis of our government.
HISTORY ONLY OBJECTIVE
“If one thinks of the cosmos un-
days.
600 RUMANIANS KILLED
Northwest of Stalingrad, communique said, the Red army force which captured the inhabited
The weather has nothing to do with it. but a huge thermometer will be erected at the Student Union today as the 1942 SC Community Chest campaign gets underway. It will record the daily rise toward this year’s chest goal of $1000, which will top last year’s goal by $250.
The annual week's drive will culminate with Friday’s all-U chest assembly in Bovard auditorium. HOME NEEDY AIDED “With so many happenings going on around the world, it is quite possible that we might forget those that are needy here back at home. Therefore it is more important than even that we all contribute this year." voiced Bud Townsend, community chest campaign manager.
A community chest hut which will be erected in front of Administration building, will serve as a focal point for the collections of student contributions to the drive. LA^EL PINS ISSUED Representatives from all university organizations will take part in the distribution of community chest lapel pins to all loyal Trojans who contribute to this worthwhile cause.
The Phelps-Terkel cup. awarded annually to the Greek house turning in the largest contribution-getting record, will be actively competed for by aggressive sorority women.
Townsend announced that all the women interested in earning activ-
ity points by working on this semester’s campaign should meet with locality killed 600 Rumanians and him in the third-floor lounge of the
REPEL NAZI THRUSTS
A communique said that allied shock troops who blasted their way through some of the main axis positions in their first assaults Friday der the analogy of mechanics, math-night had “maintained our gains ! ematics, science, self-contained at-despite enemy counter-attacks Sat- oms, survival of the fittest, power
fongress Advances een-Age Draft Bill
WASHINGTON, Oct. 25—(U.P.)—Administration leaders, holding faint hope for final action on the ’teen age draft before the November elections, tonight foresaw a “good nee ’ that senate-house conferees will eliminate a contro-sial amendment requiring one year’s pro-combat training ard 19-year-old soldiers. i-
ie restriction, proposed by Sen. ^O'Daniel, D., Tex., was adopted 39 to 31 vote in the senate de-vigorous opposition from Pres-t R*x>sevelt and his high mili-corimand.
|ongr?ssional cnieftains pointed tha;. the house once rejected a ilar proposal and that all five |ators named to the conference ittee voted against it in the »r chamber.
le bouse is expected to send the to conference tomorrow but fi-
of the military affairs committee— were reported “out of the city.”
One or more, however, may return tomorrow, when the bill is scheduled to go to conference. May probably will head the house conferees.
Besides the compulsory training restriction, the senate also, wrote in a plan by Sen. Millard E. Tyd-ings, D., Md., to defer farmers and farm labor from army service, wherever their induction would curtai'. action appeared doubtful until I agricultural production, until re-the Nov. 3 congressional elec- placements could be found. The Only a “corporal's guard” of amendment, approved 62 to 6. prob-members are in town and a ably will be accepted by the house.
The senate disregarded wishes of Mr. Roosevelt, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson, and Gen. G orge C. Marshall, chief of staff, in writ-: ing in the training amendment. The j president said the “complicated administration” involved in handling large numbers of men and the urgent necessity for correcting the army's age “deficiencies’’ made it im-
Journalist Views South's Problems
Peter Molyneaux, journalist and active participant in both national and international affairs, will speak at a joint luncheon meeting of the Graduate school and the International Relations club Thursday noon in Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall.
Molyneaux was the American representative at the recent Chatham j conference in London which considered problems of world recon-1 struction. He has written two booklets: “What Economic Nationalism Means to the South” and “The Cotton South and American Trade Policy.”
William C. Billig. recently elected president of the Graduate school, and Dan Halpin, new president of the International Relations club, will preside jointly at the meeting.
Reservations for the luncheon will be 55 cents.
call at any stage of final lings would put off a deci-itil a majority can be sum-led oack.
iltt majority leader Alben W. _ 7, D.. Ky., promised ev-effort to speed final action but three house leaders who will the bill—Speaker Sam Ray-E., Tex., Majority Leader f. McCormack. D., Maas., and Andrew J. May, D., Ky-
Hindu Tells Life of Indian Women
Members of the Sophomore-Junior club will meet today at noon at the YWCA house to hear Asit Ghcsh sp^ak orl “Women in India.’’ Th? guest sp?al:er, who comes from India, is working for his M.A. at SC.
Campus personalities will be introduced at the meeting, according to Chairman Leta Galentine. She perative to leave the bill without also announced that club officers unnecessary restriction will be elected soon.
Flying Forts Drop on Nip Feed Base
urday, and that “fighting continues.”
Meanwhile the British admiralty announced in London that submarines of the Mediterranean fleet sank five more Italian supply ships,
politics, armies, navies, airplanes, and surprise attacks, all of which, in principle, belong to a single category; then logic requires dependence upon the Tower of Babel myth as the proper and final technique of probably sank a destroyer and an human welfare. Accordingly, human
armed merchant cruiser, and damaged five more supply ships. The admiralty said 24 enemy ships have been sunk or damaged by submarines in that area this month.
The arrival of Brig. Gen. Patrick J. Hurley, U.S. minister to New Zealand, at the middle eastern war theater was announced at U.S. headquarters here. The announcement said he was on a special mission for President Roosevelt.
Air battles of “maximum intensity” are raging over the desert front, today’s communique reported. It said “the whole operations are covered by strong fighter sweeps and little enemy opposition is reported.”
GEN. MAC ARTHUR’S HEADQUARTERS, Australia, Monday,
Oct. 26—(l'.P)—U.S. army flying fortresses, continuing their devastating offensive in support of American forces in the lower Solomons, dumped 17 tons of bombs on Rabaul yesterday, sinking a Japanese gunboat, probably sinking three cargo ships, and leaving fires and ex* plosions visible for 100 miles, it was announced today.
The forts dove down into a fierce anti-aircraft barrage to hurl their
third attack in as many da\s at Determined to have fun despite the Japanese feeder, base on ew proSpec 0f hindered transporta-
Ski Club Meets for Snow Show
Britain island and run their score tfcere to 15 ships sunk, probably sunk or damaged.
Earlier reports said that the three fortress attacks, the first of which accounted for 10 ^hips on Friday, might have interrupted a new Japanese attempt to send reinforcements : against U.S. army and marine forces battling on Guadalcanal, 640 miles southeast of Rabaul.
The mid-day communique from Gen. Douglas MacArthui s headquarters said the latest attack, staged in the pre-dawn darkness of yesterday, resulted in the definite sinking of the gunboat and the , probable sinking of three cargo J ships totaling 12.000 tons.
The communique said the gunboat i was seen to sink after a direct j bomb-hit. The three cargo ships . were left listing or badly afire “and j all are believed to have been de- ] stroyed.”
In addition, great fires and explosions were touched off among Rabaul’s wharves and fuel barges anchored in the harbor.
tion this winter, the Trojan ski club will m*?et for luncheon at noon Friday in Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall. Mr. George Oliver, representative of the Yosemite Park and Curry Co. will be present to show “Sun and Snow at Yosemite.” technicolor, sound movies of skiing in the park area. .
captured many prisoners. Another Russian unit stormed the strong-holdhold and came upon the heaps of Nazi dead after repulsing a counter-attack.
The Russians occupied the corpse-choked trenches where the Germans evidently had dug in to spend the winter on the steppes that soon will be swept by blizzards.
STREET AND HOUSE BATTLE
Inside the city the defenders are “stubbornly defending every street and every house,” the communique said. The unit which beat off five attacks knocked out four | tanks and killed 260 Nazis. Another unit of Soviet mortarmen knocked out three tanks and killed up to 400 Nazis.
German attacks in the Mozdok area of the Caucasus subsided. The communique said that due to heavy losses sustained there the past few days “the enemy showed no activity.” Soviet pilots shot down three German planes and destroyed four armored cars and 12 trucks there.
Southeast of Novorossisk. on the Black sea, axis forces drove a wedge into a sector held by Russian marines, but they were thrown back in a counter-attack by Russian seamen. The communique said two companies of Rumanian infantry were wiped out.
Student Union, 9:50 this morning.
Dr. Baxter Reads Poetry of Youth
Poetry enthusiasts will be given an opportunity to glean some of the literary offerings of their contemporaries today when Dr. Frank C. Baxter holds his weekly poetry session in the art and lecture room of Doheny library at noon today.
Dr. Baxter announced that he will read from an anthology containing works of young poets who have expressed themselves on the present war.
“The poems contain some very interesting reactions to situations and circumstances from this war,’* he commented. He added that the readings would cover the pennings of several young authors instead of centering around the works of one man.
--- ■ — ■ ■ " 1----- 1 ■ 1 ’ ■ ■
SDX Convenes
There will be another in the series of very, very important Sigma Delta Chi meetings today at noon in the Daily Trojan city room. We aren’t kidding this time fellows, so please come on up.
Honest Trojan Finds Overcoat
A light tan overcoat presumably belonging to one of the 600 Trojan rooters who mad2 the trip to San Francisco over the weekend was found by an honest Trojan in the bay city and has been brought back to the SC campus. Anyone interested, particularly anyone who has lost a light tan overcoat, may obtain full particulars from Clark Bates, senior football manager.
history has no meaning beyond objects and events which attract the senses and challenge the mind to the calculation of quantities,” Dr.
Relsel explained.
According to this point of view he told that war constitutes the legitimate arbitrament of strife, a material balance of trade assigns to nations their rank within the scale of dominion, and that all values are reduced to the. material coin of the relam.
FREEDOM BASED ON VALUES
There is another view, one of permanent things which characterize the unseen world, and democracy has at its base these permanent qualities, Dr. Helsel believes.
“Democracies of tomorrow can rely in principle upon the nature of the cosmos in relation to the nature of man. Man’s freedom and integrity are not contingent upon events and circumstances, but upon attitudes, forms of good will, convictions, and spiritual qualities. And these qualities historic events do not eradicate,” declares Dr. Helsel.
There will be four more lectures j m the torum s current series de- “Neath Tommy Trojan, the all-U show, will be presented voted to*"The Spiritual Resources Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 instead of the original dates planned, Lynn of Democracy.” Speakers will be cohne, producer of the show, announced yesterday. The Dr. Herbert l. Searles. “The Seat of presentation dajes have been moved up to prevent a conflict Authority in a Democracy,” Nov. 3; 10-week exams, Miss Cohne explained.
Dr. Wilbur Long. "Propaganda and <jw)Uts for the singing and danc- i --
Democracy, Nov. 10; Dr. Merrit . choruses will continue today.
Thompson, "Educating for Democ interested in the dancing
racy,’ Nov. 17; and Dr. Carlton . | cjlorus should report to Miss Lois
Elfeldt, instructor in physical education; and singers are requested to contact Bill Murphy, musical director of the show, sometime today.
Following two weeks of tryouts,
-Comedy Conflict—
Exams Cause Shift in All-U Show Date
Rodee, “Contemporary Challenges
to Democracy,” Nov. 24.
Fraternity
Nancie Sheldon and Senior Bob Riehle were selected to play the leading roles supported by Joyce Hill, Ted Olewine, Jim Humphries, and Marty Bennison.
. . , scholarship chairmen will be cast finany selected last Wed-selected tonight at the regular ; nesday will go into rehearsal this greek business meetings. Bob Fisk, afternoon.
Women who signed up to do typing work for the all-U show are asked by Lynn Cohne to report to the YWCA during chapel period this morning.
5i ________-— - Dancing and singing Bob Cashey, play production man-
president ot the interfratemity 'h^Wed"^^1" lhe,r rehearsals ager. win direct th,ejstaow, assisted
last night announced a
council, — -- - | ^^5 o{ the musiCal comedy is meeting of all the newly selected , fche ^ campus with the love inchairmen tomorrow at 4 p.m. in terest supplied by an heiress and a 418 Student Union. shy„0 and M worker. Freshman
by Pat Conrad and Bom Simoneon. Bill Murphy, president of the School of Music, is musical director for the show with Lloyd Curtail* and Leah Tiegs assisting.

roy Backs Sigma Nu
.harcoal Room j ' $0\Qmn Atta(j(S
‘raws Dancers , i> • i
Benefit Dig Increase Despite Loss
I From the top of the Mark San Francisco to the star-“Charcoal room” of the
Igma I^u house will throng [embers of the Trojan stu-
Nipponese Succeed in Landing Reinforcements; Tanks Repulse All Guadalcanal Enemy Attacks
WASHINGTON, Oct. 25—(U.P.)—Japanese forces using tanks and artillery have been repulsed in four attempts to nt-bocy tonight at 8:30 as penetrate United States positions on Guadalcanal, and in the ey climax the weekend’s increasingly fierce land, sea, and air fighting U.S. forces rthern jaunt by supporting have damaged up to five more Jap warships and destroyed
21 enemy planes, the navy an-
“fire dance benefit” to aid Sigma Nus in rebuilding fir recently burned fraternity ise.
tn charge of the dance will be |nry Eschen. Sigma Nu president.
Head Yell King Russ Linder-|ith. Jl st who will furnish the Sng is not definitely decided but is probable that Trojans will get latest recordings of America's bands
[-CONDITIONED
Drat:ons for the dance will be ing to the condition of the fra-Jnity htuse which was swept by les last Monday afternoon. )ancing in the “Charcoal room,”
Ih its iew air-conditioning and natural star-studded appearance allow some 600 Trojans to taper their recent strenuous froliifc-at the Mark Hopkins and the |ace hotels in San Francisco and back to their normal work-a-lives as students.
:nty of laughs
^aturec entertainer of the “Char-roorr” will probably be popu-[ jitterbugging Lindersmith. Fresh his iriumph at the recent Ke-stadium gala event, Linder-|th car. be counted upon for the st dance steps and plenty of ?hs. Another top-ranking co-ian of the campus, Ted Olewine racquet man, may put in an ►arance.
sident Eschen said that ev-i>ne ir the university is invited urges students to attend the ce benefit. Eschen also wished thank the fraternities along the that have cooperated with Sig-Nu members by housing them wanly.
RAF Lancasters Hit Milan Plant
British Bomb War Site Fourth Time
I Arrests Jap lies in Texas
JHXNGTON, Oct. 26—(HE) — of the 52 Japanese aliens ar-l^d by the federal bureau of in-Lgaticn in Houston tonight were jbers of the “Lone Star Club” iJapnnese organization involved Ijdespread propaganda activities, raj ieamed authoritatively to-lt.
also was involved in the “us-at tempts at espionage, a hingflon official disclosed, rmbers of the club contributed py to Japan regularly, the of-revealed. but since Dec. 7, hat no way of sending it. thus anting for the large sums found lieir homes.
|st of the Japanese hoped to t» their homeland and re-Japanese and foreign secur-| in return for their contribu-
one place raided, officials 30 one-thousand dollar bonds ^e Tokyo Electric company, it id here. Another Japanese three $1000 bonds of the "King-lof Italy."
LONDON, Oct. 25—(U.E) — Heavy RAF bombers skimmed the peaks of the Alps and blasted northern Italy for the fourth time in 48 hours last night, concentrating on the industrial city of Milan, site of the huge Caproni bomt>er plant, and the Italians announced officially that “great damage” has been done and 589 persons were killed or wounded in the four raids.
It is the worst battering Italy has taken throughout the war and coincides with widespread reports of collapsing Italian morale and the launching of the allied offensive in Egypt. Axis armies in north Africa get many of their supplies from the Italian ports of Genoa and Savona, and from the industries of Turin, Milan, Monza and Novara, all of which have been hit hard in three successive night raids and one intervening attack.
VICHY ADMITS RAIL BLASTS (Vichy announced that RAF bombers atatcked south French railways at several points on their way to and from Italy Saturday afternoon. The purpose might have been to disrupt traffic on railways leading to Marseile and Nice, so the Germans could not use them for shipping supplies to Africa.)
Bomber crews attacked several other northern Italian industrial cities, including Monza and Novara last night.
RAID SMASHES GENOA
The first of the big raids Thursday night, smashed Italy's chief port of Genoa. Friday night the RAF heavily raided Genoa again and dropped tons of explosives and incendiaries on the manufacturing city of Turin and the port of Savona. almost at the exact hour that the allied army in Egypt launched its offensive.
Saturday the RAF sent an esti- j mated 50 bombers across France for the daylight raid on Milan and Saturday night a stronger force returned to smash the city again.
Bomber crews reported direct hits on important factories at Milan and important damage in other cities.
Wesley League
. . . members will have their weekly dance for both civilians and servicemen tomorrow at 7:45 p.m. at the University Methodist church, 817 West 34th street. They announced last night that more women are needed for dancing partners.
Good Chance
nounced tonight.
Despite mounting losses, however, the Japs succeeded in landing more reinforcements on the northwest end of the island today, the communique said. The strength of the new force was not known.
The land assaults were the heaviest yet described by the navy department in the current Jap drive to recapture their lost airport on Guadalcanal and marked the first time they had used tanks.
“Our army and marine corps troops and artillery batteries repulsed each attack and destroyed five enemy tanks,’’ the announcement said.
FOUR ATTACKS ON FRIDAY
Four of the ground attacks occurred Friday night and the communique said it was broken up by U.S. aircraft and artillery. One American plane was lost in the operation.
The U.S. air attacks in which the Japs ships were damaged extended from Thursday night until today.
On Thursday night U.S. long-range aircraft attacked enemy ships in the Shortland island area northwest of Guadalcanal, damaging a light cruiser with one direct and one probable torpedo hit and* a destroyer with a bomb hit. A heavy cruiser or battleship possibly was damaged by a torpedo hit. i U.S. HITS CRUISERS
On Saturday night U.S. aircraft attacked an enemy surface force of several cruisers and destroyers about 300 miles northeast of Guadalcanal. One cruiser was reported probably damaged by a torpedo.
The fifth enemy vessel, a cruiser, was damaged by bombs today when Douglas 'Dauntless' dive bombers from Guadalcanal made three attacks on an enemy force of cruisers and destroyers immediately north of Florida island. The attack forced the enemy vessels to withdraw.
The bag of 21 enemy aircraft came late Friday morning when 16 enemy bombers escorted by 20 Zero fighters attacked the American airport on Guadalcanal. Grumman Wildcat’ fighters intercepted them and shot down one of the bombers, damaged three others and destroyed the entire fighter squadron. HEAVIEST TOLL YET It was one of the heaviest tolls ever taken by the American forces in a single action in the Solomons. No mention was made of American losses, if any.
The new Jap losses brought to at least 51 the number of their ships damaged in the Solomons, in addition to 10 known to have been sunk and three probably sunk. They have lost at least 374 airplanes.
The intensified land, sea, and air action served notice that the supreme test was not far off for the army, navy, and marine forces fighting in the Solomons, as well as for their new commander, Vice Admiral William F. Halsey Jr., who yesterday was named to succeed Vice Admiral Robert L. Ghormley as chief of the Solomons campaign.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Jrojan
Vol. XXXIV
NAS—Z-42
Nieht Phone: Kl. 5471
Los Angeles, Calif., Monday, October 26, 1942
No. 27
SC CHEST CAMPAIGN TO OPEN TODAY
Allied Desert Troops tnSurpnseRa,d Crack Nazi Defenses
Allied Bombers Hit Hong Kong
TOKYO. Oct. 26 — (Japanese broadcast recorded by United Press in San Francisco) — Eight allied bombers blasted Hong Kong from a high altitude Sunday afternoon, dropping “several” incendiary bombs in the first air raid on the former British crown colony since its occupation by the Japanese, the Tokyo radio announced today.
A Japanese broadcast said Jap fighters repulsed the raiders.
“The Japanese planes immediately shot down one enemy plane,” the Tokyo radio said, “and saw another falling in a trail of black smoke.”
CAIRO, Oct. 25—(U.P.)—Allied desert troops hurled back the first enemy counter-attacks in the new battle for North Africa today and pressed on through the barbed wire and mine fields of the El Alamein line while U.S.. British, and South African planes routed the nazis from the sky and British submarines reported torpedoing 12 more ships in the Mediterranean.
Allied tanks have poured in strength through one gap in the mine fields, according to a dispatch from a United Press correspondent.
Repercussions of the battle rag- --—
Annual Campus Campaign Sets $1000 as Goal
Ing on a 40-mile stretch of desert between the Mediterranean and the
Students Probe Co-op Housing
Co-op housing plans will be oyg-inated today when two SC students, Raymond Barrio and Christine Hanks, meet with Helen H. Moreland. dean of women, and Francis M. Bacon, counselor of men.
Barrio, sophomore, was part of a successful co-op housing plan in New York City college where he enrolled before coming to SC. He is trying to get the students of SC interested in this housing.
“We cannot go ahead with any definite plans until we find that there is some interest by the student body for co-op housing” said Dean Bacon.
Several colleges in the United States have tried this plan of providing inexpensive living accomodations and found it to prove vefy successful. They eliminated a lot of extra expenses by not hiring outside help except cooks. Co-op housing w’as found to be the answer to the tire situation and to the gas rationing problem, according to supporters of the system.
If the boys continue to be drafted even the fraternities will be faced with a problem of keeping up their houses. They may have to go into co-op housing to the extent of doing most of their work and cutting down their expenses.
Dean Bacon remarked that “Any students who are interested in this plan, should come into my office and sign up.”
Two Streets Cost Nazis 9000 Men
Qattara salt bogs were rocking all of western Europe as giant RAF bombers based in Britain raced across the Alps four times in three days to blast the industries and ports of northern Italy, which supply the axis armies in Egypt. j , ,, _ , s _
I MOSCOW, Monday, Oct. 26—(U.P.)—German assault troops raf bombs France j captured two streets in the factory area of north Stalingrad
(Vichy dispatches said raf bomb- Sunday while a Russian relief army bearing down from the ers left a trail of destruction northwest swept through an inhabited locality and seized a
.U5.ou£12„s?r'!^e.1T_ stronghold where 3000 German dead were found lying in
-1 trenches and dugouts, the high
way from Vichy to the Alps Satur day afternoon on their way to and from Italy, attacking railroads in the vicinities of Vichy, Chateau-roux, Montlucon, Roanne, and Am-nency. This might mean the British were bent on preventing axis supplies reaching Africa over the south French railways to the ports
of Marseille and Nice.) i ' , .. ,
The Foundations of Western
U.S. fliers had their biggest day, ^ocmy" will be the subject of so far in Africa Saturday, bombing
Helsel Lectures at Forum Series
and shooting up axis troop camps, gun emplacements and motor caravans, and by dusk smoke rose 3000 feet in the air from blazing ammunition dumps, tanks, trucks, and oil depots. Only one enemy plane was shot down all day. Enemy anti-aircraft fire was fierce, however, and the allies lost 12 planes over the desert and Malta, where four more enemy raiders were destroyed.
the second of a series of lectures
command announced today.
Numerous assaults inside the city were beaten back, one Soviet unit withstanding five successive attacks without giving ground, but the Germans drove ahead with a new burst of fury and “at a price of heavy losses succeeded in occupying two streets of the factory settlement.” the midnight communique reported. It was the third day of a
presented by the Philosephy forum new Stalingrad offensive which cost
the Nazis 9000 men the first two
and discussed by Dr. Paul R. Helsel, associate professor of philosophy at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Bowne hall.
Dr. Helsel will contrast the temporary material things which form the basis for concepts of the totalitarian rules with the lasting, intangible qualities which axe the basis of our government.
HISTORY ONLY OBJECTIVE
“If one thinks of the cosmos un-
days.
600 RUMANIANS KILLED
Northwest of Stalingrad, communique said, the Red army force which captured the inhabited
The weather has nothing to do with it. but a huge thermometer will be erected at the Student Union today as the 1942 SC Community Chest campaign gets underway. It will record the daily rise toward this year’s chest goal of $1000, which will top last year’s goal by $250.
The annual week's drive will culminate with Friday’s all-U chest assembly in Bovard auditorium. HOME NEEDY AIDED “With so many happenings going on around the world, it is quite possible that we might forget those that are needy here back at home. Therefore it is more important than even that we all contribute this year." voiced Bud Townsend, community chest campaign manager.
A community chest hut which will be erected in front of Administration building, will serve as a focal point for the collections of student contributions to the drive. LA^EL PINS ISSUED Representatives from all university organizations will take part in the distribution of community chest lapel pins to all loyal Trojans who contribute to this worthwhile cause.
The Phelps-Terkel cup. awarded annually to the Greek house turning in the largest contribution-getting record, will be actively competed for by aggressive sorority women.
Townsend announced that all the women interested in earning activ-
ity points by working on this semester’s campaign should meet with locality killed 600 Rumanians and him in the third-floor lounge of the
REPEL NAZI THRUSTS
A communique said that allied shock troops who blasted their way through some of the main axis positions in their first assaults Friday der the analogy of mechanics, math-night had “maintained our gains ! ematics, science, self-contained at-despite enemy counter-attacks Sat- oms, survival of the fittest, power
fongress Advances een-Age Draft Bill
WASHINGTON, Oct. 25—(U.P.)—Administration leaders, holding faint hope for final action on the ’teen age draft before the November elections, tonight foresaw a “good nee ’ that senate-house conferees will eliminate a contro-sial amendment requiring one year’s pro-combat training ard 19-year-old soldiers. i-
ie restriction, proposed by Sen. ^O'Daniel, D., Tex., was adopted 39 to 31 vote in the senate de-vigorous opposition from Pres-t R*x>sevelt and his high mili-corimand.
|ongr?ssional cnieftains pointed tha;. the house once rejected a ilar proposal and that all five |ators named to the conference ittee voted against it in the »r chamber.
le bouse is expected to send the to conference tomorrow but fi-
of the military affairs committee— were reported “out of the city.”
One or more, however, may return tomorrow, when the bill is scheduled to go to conference. May probably will head the house conferees.
Besides the compulsory training restriction, the senate also, wrote in a plan by Sen. Millard E. Tyd-ings, D., Md., to defer farmers and farm labor from army service, wherever their induction would curtai'. action appeared doubtful until I agricultural production, until re-the Nov. 3 congressional elec- placements could be found. The Only a “corporal's guard” of amendment, approved 62 to 6. prob-members are in town and a ably will be accepted by the house.
The senate disregarded wishes of Mr. Roosevelt, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson, and Gen. G orge C. Marshall, chief of staff, in writ-: ing in the training amendment. The j president said the “complicated administration” involved in handling large numbers of men and the urgent necessity for correcting the army's age “deficiencies’’ made it im-
Journalist Views South's Problems
Peter Molyneaux, journalist and active participant in both national and international affairs, will speak at a joint luncheon meeting of the Graduate school and the International Relations club Thursday noon in Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall.
Molyneaux was the American representative at the recent Chatham j conference in London which considered problems of world recon-1 struction. He has written two booklets: “What Economic Nationalism Means to the South” and “The Cotton South and American Trade Policy.”
William C. Billig. recently elected president of the Graduate school, and Dan Halpin, new president of the International Relations club, will preside jointly at the meeting.
Reservations for the luncheon will be 55 cents.
call at any stage of final lings would put off a deci-itil a majority can be sum-led oack.
iltt majority leader Alben W. _ 7, D.. Ky., promised ev-effort to speed final action but three house leaders who will the bill—Speaker Sam Ray-E., Tex., Majority Leader f. McCormack. D., Maas., and Andrew J. May, D., Ky-
Hindu Tells Life of Indian Women
Members of the Sophomore-Junior club will meet today at noon at the YWCA house to hear Asit Ghcsh sp^ak orl “Women in India.’’ Th? guest sp?al:er, who comes from India, is working for his M.A. at SC.
Campus personalities will be introduced at the meeting, according to Chairman Leta Galentine. She perative to leave the bill without also announced that club officers unnecessary restriction will be elected soon.
Flying Forts Drop on Nip Feed Base
urday, and that “fighting continues.”
Meanwhile the British admiralty announced in London that submarines of the Mediterranean fleet sank five more Italian supply ships,
politics, armies, navies, airplanes, and surprise attacks, all of which, in principle, belong to a single category; then logic requires dependence upon the Tower of Babel myth as the proper and final technique of probably sank a destroyer and an human welfare. Accordingly, human
armed merchant cruiser, and damaged five more supply ships. The admiralty said 24 enemy ships have been sunk or damaged by submarines in that area this month.
The arrival of Brig. Gen. Patrick J. Hurley, U.S. minister to New Zealand, at the middle eastern war theater was announced at U.S. headquarters here. The announcement said he was on a special mission for President Roosevelt.
Air battles of “maximum intensity” are raging over the desert front, today’s communique reported. It said “the whole operations are covered by strong fighter sweeps and little enemy opposition is reported.”
GEN. MAC ARTHUR’S HEADQUARTERS, Australia, Monday,
Oct. 26—(l'.P)—U.S. army flying fortresses, continuing their devastating offensive in support of American forces in the lower Solomons, dumped 17 tons of bombs on Rabaul yesterday, sinking a Japanese gunboat, probably sinking three cargo ships, and leaving fires and ex* plosions visible for 100 miles, it was announced today.
The forts dove down into a fierce anti-aircraft barrage to hurl their
third attack in as many da\s at Determined to have fun despite the Japanese feeder, base on ew proSpec 0f hindered transporta-
Ski Club Meets for Snow Show
Britain island and run their score tfcere to 15 ships sunk, probably sunk or damaged.
Earlier reports said that the three fortress attacks, the first of which accounted for 10 ^hips on Friday, might have interrupted a new Japanese attempt to send reinforcements : against U.S. army and marine forces battling on Guadalcanal, 640 miles southeast of Rabaul.
The mid-day communique from Gen. Douglas MacArthui s headquarters said the latest attack, staged in the pre-dawn darkness of yesterday, resulted in the definite sinking of the gunboat and the , probable sinking of three cargo J ships totaling 12.000 tons.
The communique said the gunboat i was seen to sink after a direct j bomb-hit. The three cargo ships . were left listing or badly afire “and j all are believed to have been de- ] stroyed.”
In addition, great fires and explosions were touched off among Rabaul’s wharves and fuel barges anchored in the harbor.
tion this winter, the Trojan ski club will m*?et for luncheon at noon Friday in Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall. Mr. George Oliver, representative of the Yosemite Park and Curry Co. will be present to show “Sun and Snow at Yosemite.” technicolor, sound movies of skiing in the park area. .
captured many prisoners. Another Russian unit stormed the strong-holdhold and came upon the heaps of Nazi dead after repulsing a counter-attack.
The Russians occupied the corpse-choked trenches where the Germans evidently had dug in to spend the winter on the steppes that soon will be swept by blizzards.
STREET AND HOUSE BATTLE
Inside the city the defenders are “stubbornly defending every street and every house,” the communique said. The unit which beat off five attacks knocked out four | tanks and killed 260 Nazis. Another unit of Soviet mortarmen knocked out three tanks and killed up to 400 Nazis.
German attacks in the Mozdok area of the Caucasus subsided. The communique said that due to heavy losses sustained there the past few days “the enemy showed no activity.” Soviet pilots shot down three German planes and destroyed four armored cars and 12 trucks there.
Southeast of Novorossisk. on the Black sea, axis forces drove a wedge into a sector held by Russian marines, but they were thrown back in a counter-attack by Russian seamen. The communique said two companies of Rumanian infantry were wiped out.
Student Union, 9:50 this morning.
Dr. Baxter Reads Poetry of Youth
Poetry enthusiasts will be given an opportunity to glean some of the literary offerings of their contemporaries today when Dr. Frank C. Baxter holds his weekly poetry session in the art and lecture room of Doheny library at noon today.
Dr. Baxter announced that he will read from an anthology containing works of young poets who have expressed themselves on the present war.
“The poems contain some very interesting reactions to situations and circumstances from this war,’* he commented. He added that the readings would cover the pennings of several young authors instead of centering around the works of one man.
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SDX Convenes
There will be another in the series of very, very important Sigma Delta Chi meetings today at noon in the Daily Trojan city room. We aren’t kidding this time fellows, so please come on up.
Honest Trojan Finds Overcoat
A light tan overcoat presumably belonging to one of the 600 Trojan rooters who mad2 the trip to San Francisco over the weekend was found by an honest Trojan in the bay city and has been brought back to the SC campus. Anyone interested, particularly anyone who has lost a light tan overcoat, may obtain full particulars from Clark Bates, senior football manager.
history has no meaning beyond objects and events which attract the senses and challenge the mind to the calculation of quantities,” Dr.
Relsel explained.
According to this point of view he told that war constitutes the legitimate arbitrament of strife, a material balance of trade assigns to nations their rank within the scale of dominion, and that all values are reduced to the. material coin of the relam.
FREEDOM BASED ON VALUES
There is another view, one of permanent things which characterize the unseen world, and democracy has at its base these permanent qualities, Dr. Helsel believes.
“Democracies of tomorrow can rely in principle upon the nature of the cosmos in relation to the nature of man. Man’s freedom and integrity are not contingent upon events and circumstances, but upon attitudes, forms of good will, convictions, and spiritual qualities. And these qualities historic events do not eradicate,” declares Dr. Helsel.
There will be four more lectures j m the torum s current series de- “Neath Tommy Trojan, the all-U show, will be presented voted to*"The Spiritual Resources Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 instead of the original dates planned, Lynn of Democracy.” Speakers will be cohne, producer of the show, announced yesterday. The Dr. Herbert l. Searles. “The Seat of presentation dajes have been moved up to prevent a conflict Authority in a Democracy,” Nov. 3; 10-week exams, Miss Cohne explained.
Dr. Wilbur Long. "Propaganda and